1974 Topps - Pennant Fever

Friday, June 27, 2014

And the final card of the ’74
set belongs to... Larry Dierker, showing his pitching form in spring training
on that huge complex. Larry broke his hand right before the season opened in
’73 so this shot is taken earlier that season or is from a prior one. The
season didn’t get much better. After returning in June for a couple starts
Larry hurt his shoulder and wouldn’t return from that injury for another month,
and then didn’t throw too well the balance of the season, nearly all of it in
middle relief. It was pretty much a season to forget for him, but not for Topps
apparently, since it gave Larry a pretty distinctive card number. Larry was an
optimist, though, and things would turn around for him shortly and get way
better down the road, except for that short run in ’99 that must have made ’73
look like a picnic.

Larry Dierker grew up in
southern California and would get to be a big
sought-after pitcher, already 6’4” and 200 pounds by his senior year at Taft High
School. Though he went only 4-6 that season of
’64 he reportedly had 18 teams interested in him. That number was reduced to a
bidding war of two: the Cubs and the Colt .45’s and Larry signed with the
latter team for a $55,000 bonus. He was only 17 but he kicked off things pretty
well that summer in Rookie ball, going 2-3 in nine starts with a 3.23 ERA and
61 strikeouts in his 39 innings. The Colt .45’s were always looking for a media
event and so that late September Larry was pulled up to Houston to make his first MLB start on his 18th
birthday. He took a loss, but he struck out Willie Mays in that game and would
never return to the minors.

Dierker immediately joined
the rotation in ’65 and that season and the next he would have a tough time
getting decisions. In ’65 the now Astros would hold Larry to a 110 pitch count
timit per game which kept him from completing too many but in ’66 he went deep
in pretty much every start thoughby the
end of May he only had two decisions. Still, both years he posted strong second
halves and overall threw well, cementing his rotation spot. He was enjoying a
nice run in ’67 when in mid-June he was called to his military obligation and
missed the rest of the year. Back on the mound in ’68 was a bit different and
Larry would get a decision in all but five of his games that season. In both
’66 and ’68 he spent some short time on the DL in late July. In ’69 he used an
early-season 10-3 run to become the first Houston
pitcher to win 20, supporting it with an excellent ERA and his lifetime high in
strikeouts as he made his first All-Star appearance. In ’70 his ERA got bloated
a bit by a few too many gopher balls – he gave up 31 homers vs. only 18 in ’69
– and in ’71 his 10-4 start got him another All-Star nod before he suffered his
first serious shoulder ailment and missed the season from early August on. It
was, he would later claim, the beginning of his rotator cuff issues that would
haunt his career going forward. Still, the rest he received in ’71 helped him
produce another very good year in ’72 before everything sort of blew up in ’73.
“74 would be much better and though Larry again pitched well, decisions would
be elusive, especially early in the year. He finished with a record of 11-10
with a 2.90 ERA and followed that up in ’75 that resembled his ’70 season: 14-16
with a 4.00 ERA on a few too many homers. In ’76 another relatively fat ERA
followed until a July game in which he no-hit the Expos set him on a 6-6/2.83
pace the rest of the way as he finished the season 13-14/3.69, his final one in
Houston as a
player. He was traded to St. Louis
with Jerry DaVanon for catcher Joe Ferguson but by that time his shoulder was
toast and after a 2-6/4.58 run in only 40 innings he retired with a record of
139-123 with a 3.31 ERA, 106 complete games, 25 shutouts, and a save.

Before 1977 ended, Dierker
was back in Houston
where he got a front office PR and sales job. In ’79 he began a long run as a
color commentator on Astros broadcasts which would last through ’96 when he was
talked into taking over as the Houston
manager. The Astros had had three straight second-place finishes and though
Larry had no experience on the coaching side, he would be the right guy to get
the team over the hump. His first and second years Houston won its division. In ’99 the team was
enjoying another nice run when Larry went down in the dugout with what would be
called a grand mal seizure, from which he would require surgery to deal with a
blood clot in his brain. He would return to lead the Astros to another first
place finish. 2000 would be tough as a big injury bug decimated his team but in
2001 the Astros would win the division again. Despite the regular season
successes, though, the Astros would go down fast in the playoffs each year and
following the ’01 campaign – in which Larry won the second of his Manager of
the Year titles – he would be either dismissed or resigned, depending on the
source of the information. He finished with a record of 435-348. Since then he
has written a couple books, contributed as a writer to a few sites, and had a
loose community affiliation with the Astros. That changed in May of 2013 when
he was hired as a full-time special assistant to the president, a title he
still holds.

Larry’s star bullets are
no-brainers and he has also been a big fan of golf according to his cartoons. He
gets some great props in “Ball Four” since he was teammate of Jim Bouton’s
after Bouton’s second-half trade to Houston.
Bouton loved his arsenal of pitches: a great fastball and curve, and a money
hard slider which Bouton said it hurt just to watch (and would later hurt
Dierker as well). He was also very impressed with a no-no Larry took into the
ninth, continued to pitch shutout ball to the 12th, and then had to
watch as the bullpen blew in the 13th against the division-winning
Braves. He just calmly took the loss and blamed nobody. Pretty classy.

Monday, June 23, 2014

This mutton-chopped guy
finally gets his first solo card, nearly ten years after being signed in ’64.
Joe Lis had rookie cards in both the ’70 and ’71 set and then switched teams
before reappearing on a sunny day in Oakland during batting practice. He got
his first serious chunk of playing time in ’73 partly as a result of Harmon
Killebrew’s injury, and put up some decent numbers while filling in at first
base. Joe could hit, as some of the numbers on his card back attest, but up top
he’d suffer from too little field time and way too many strikeouts and shortly
after this card’s appearance he’d be on the move again. But he loved baseball
and while it didn’t always love him back, he would parlay that love into a long
career in a different venue.

Joe Lis was a big three
sports star in New Jersey
in the early Sixties and would end his high school baseball career with a .521
average and a total of 17 homers his junior and senior years before being
signed by the Phillies in June of ’64. That summer and the next in A ball were
a bit tough at the plate but the latter season he was one of his league’s
best-fielding third basemen and in ’66 around some military time he got back
his power stroke with 16 homers and 62 RBI’s in just 332 at bats. He remained
at that level in ’67 and really cranked the power that season. Despite his
improved numbers he remained in A ball in ’68, added 40 points to his average,
and began putting in some serious outfield time. He made the big jump to Triple
A in ’69, just in time for his first significant loss of time to injury via
some hamstring and wrist problems, but still put up OK numbers. By then he was
pretty much exclusively an outfielder and his ’70 season would be far better
than OK as he seriously crushed the ball in Triple A and made his MLB debut in
September with a few games in left field. In ’71 the Phillies didn’t have much
of a team – they’d record 95 losses that season – but they had a bunch of young
outfielders coming off excellent ’70 minor league seasons in Willie Montanez,
Greg Luzinski, Roger Freed, Mike Anderson, and Joe. That competition was
escalated by the presence of incumbent Larry Hisle, who was only 24, and the
move of Don Money to the outfield. So despite making the Phillies out of camp
and getting some early season starts in left, when Joe went into a bit of a
slump marred by pretty high K totals, there was no shortage of guys to step in
and his at bats declined as the season aged. He began the ’72 season back in
Triple A where his monster stats included a .473 OBA and prompted his return to
Philly in June. Now moved to first base, he improved his offensive numbers
significantly, reducing his K totals and moving his OBA up to .380. But with Willie
Montanez scheduled to take over first full-time, Joe and pitchers Ken Sanders
and Ken Reynolds went to Minnesota
for everyman Cesar Tovar.

Lis began the ’74 season on
the Twins roster, but moved to third in the depth chart at first base behind
The Killer and new kid Craig Kusick. Hitting .195 with zero power during his
little plate time didn’t help things and early in June he was sold to Cleveland where he got
some initial work subbing at third base for the injured Buddy Bell, but again
played primarily at first. He added some RBI numbers but his offense overall
wasn’t so hot as he posted a ’74 line of .200/6/19 in his 150 at bats. He then
spent most of ’75 and ’76 in Triple A for the Tribe where he averaged lines of
.290/24/86 with an OBA of .424 while playingmostly first. He brought some of that magic to Cleveland as during that
time he posted a .312 average with 15 RBI’s and a .420 OBA in his 64 at bats.
That winter he was selected by Seattle in the expansion draft and for the
Mariners he put in some early time at DH before he returned to Cleveland and
Triple A and hit .267 with a .388 OBA for a couple teams. In ’78 he went to Japan – a
common theme for recent post subjects – where he posted a disappointing
.206/6/30 line in 262 at bats as a first baseman/DH. Then it was back to The
States and one final shot for Detroit's Triple A club for whom he posted a ’79
line of .292/16/80/.384 in his final season. Joe closed things out with an MLB
line of .233/32/92/.332 in his 709 at bats and a minor league line of
.277/238/614/.382.

Lis remained with the Detroit organization a
couple additional years as a minor league coach, leaving pro ball following the
’81 season. He had begun doing the guest speaker route while in Cleveland which he
continued after playing. He also set up a hitting school in his garage back in Indiana which eventually
morphed into a business. His son Joe Jr. would be drafted by the Blue Jays and reach Triple A in the mid-Nineties before helping out at his dad’s school. This
Joe continued to operate his hitting school until he was laid low by prostate
cancer, from which he passed away in 2010. He was 64.

Joe’s card back shows off
most of his better minor league work and showcases his slugging and defense in
’67. He had much better season as a slugger though, topping his .522 slugging
average that year in ’70 (.616) and ’72 (.775). That second year he seemed an
even money bet to break Tony Lazzeri’s PCL record home run total of 60 when he
was called back to Philly. Joe had 26 homers with about two-thirds of the
season still left. He has a pretty good SABR bio.

The colors are almost the
same but the leagues aren’t so let’s see how we get these guys together:

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

I really am stretching this
thing out but, trust me, it’s not intentional. Too much work and other stuff.
For our third-to-last card we get Lee Lacy at Shea looking very serious. That
face could have something to do with what was going on at the time in the LA
infield, then Lee’s professional stomping ground. ’73 saw the initiation of
that long-lasting combo of Garvey/Lopes/Russell/Cey which meant that Lee’s
playing time contracted considerably from his rookie season. For a while things
would stay that way and barring injury it would be tough for Lee to get any
field time. But his versatility would prove to be his saving grace and that
ability to play just about anywhere in the field would help him have a long
fruitful career.

Lee Lacy was born in Texas and relocated to Oakland before high school. He did the
multi-sport thing and then went to nearby Laney College
where he played both hoops and baseball. He was drafted midway through his
second year there in January ’69 and then played mostly third while producing
some pretty good offense that included a .402 OBA. In ’70 he moved up to A ball
and over to shortstop where he produced more good plate numbers but had a super
tough time in the field. His offense got him to Double A in ’71 where on top of
another good offensive season he improved at both shortstop and third but
actually spent most of his time at second, which seems to have been a better
fit. Lee remained at that level and position for ’72 where he banged the ball
super well, putting up a .417 OBA, continued to improve his defense, and got
his call up in June.

The late Sixties and the
early Seventies were sort of a transitional mess for the Dodgers outside of
first base. There were lots of crash and burns at third – Bob Bailey, Bill
Sudakis, and Billy Grabarkewitz – and for a little bit Ted Sizemore seemed to
be the man at second after his ROY
season in ’69. But he went to St.
Louis to get Dick Allen, Jim Lefebvre got hurt and was
needed to fill the gap at third, fellow young guy Bobby Valentine played
everywhere, and converted outfielder Bill Russell eventually settled at
shortstop. Into this stew came Lacy in the summer of ’72 to pretty much take
over the regular job the rest of the way.while plugging the gap on defense and
doing an OK job at the plate. He then began ’73 in the same role, got hurt in
mid-May while hitting .195, and returned to see his spot taken by Davey Lopes,
who wouldn’t give it up until Lee was long gone. In ’74 his at bats fell even
further during the championship season though he hit .282 and got a bit of
post-season time. In ’75 LA got hit big by the injury bug which killed their
playoff chances but worked nicely for Lee, who posted a .314/7/40 line in 306
at bats while filling in at second and for the first time in the outfield.
After that season he joined rapidly-aging Jimmy Wynn, Tom Paciorek, and Jerry
Royster in a trade to Atlanta
for Dusty Baker and Ed Goodson. With the Braves, Lee took over regular duties
at second before a hitting slump and then an injury took him out of action a
couple weeks. But he got his average up to .272 before he was traded again,
this time back to LA with reliever Elias Sosa for Mike Marshall. The rest of
the way for the Dodgers he spent the bulk of his time in center and hit .266
overall, with a .385 average as a pinch hitter in what would be his busiest
year for a while. In both ’77 and ’78 he did his back-up thing in both the
infield and outfield, averaging in the mid-.260’s. That first year he hit very
well in a return to the post-season and in that second year he added some
power, with a .261/13/40 line in 245 at bats. That winter he left LA as a free
agent and signed with the Pirates.

In Pittsburgh Lacy again
assumed a back-up role, but this time exclusively in the outfield and there
nearly all the time in left. His stats – a .249 average with 15 RBI’s in 182 at
bats – weren’t anything special but his timing sure was as he joined a Series
champion. He then moved into a platoon role in left and hit a ton better in ’80
with a .335/7/33 line with 18 stolen bases and 45 runs in just 278 at bats.
After an off season in the strike year of ’81 he hit his stride in ’82 with
.312/5/31/40/66 numbers in 359 at bats. Then followed a ..302/4/13/31/40 ’82 in
288 at bats; and a .321/12/70/21/66 ’84 in 474 at bats in his final season in Pittsburgh. After that it
was another departure via free agency, this time to Baltimore where he became the regular right
fielder, averaging .290/10/48 seasons in ’85 and ’86 before ending things in
’87 when he was 39. Lee finished with a .286 average with 91 homers, 458 RBI’s,
185 stole bases, and a .340 OBA. In the post season he hit .241 in his 17
games.

Lacy got into a bit of
trouble when he was named late in his playing career as one of the
cocaine-using players during the Pittsburgh drug trials. By then he’d had his
daughter Jennifer, who would grow up to be a star hoops player at Pepperdine
and is still playing in the WNBA. Lee did the year-plus in the Senior League in
’89 –’90 and appears to have remained in the Southern
California area since playing for LA. He is a regular at autograph
and other events for the Dodgers though I haven’t been able to nail down what
he’s done professionally since playing.

Lee’s star bullets give us a
look at some of his achievements in high School and at Laney. His is also the
final card that gives us a look at what he did during the off-season via the
cartoon.

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

The book “Seasons in Hell”
describes the Texas Rangers spring training site in Pompano Beach as about the ugliest complex
ever ringed with palm trees covered with fungus. That looks about right in this
final card shot of Jim Shellenback on what may be the mound. Jim has an
impossibly long face which gets even more elongated by the placement of his
eyes which are scrunched up way on his forehead (check out his ’70 card). ’73
wasn’t much of an MLB season for Jim, about whom we get no color in the above
book. Pretty much all of it was spent in Triple A where, given the team’s
dynamics, one would think his 13-7 season in the rotation and four shutouts would
have made someone excited. But Jim was 29 then and his ERA was a bit fat at
4.31 and since Texas
was in the midst of a youth movement for its rotation – both Jim Bibby and
David Clyde were rookies – this Jim seems not to have had too many chips on his
table. He’d get another couple shots up top, neither of which went too well. But
like the former post subject, Adrian Garrett, Jim would come off his
seldom-used MLB time into a super long coaching stretch.

Jim Shellenback was signed by
the Yankees upon graduating Ramona High School in California
– a school also attended by Steve Barber and Tom Hall in this set – in ’62.
After a summer of D and C ball during which he went 1-5 with a 4.04 ERA but 57
K’s in 49 innings, Jim was selected by Pittsburgh
in the first year draft. The Pirates moved Jim up to A ball where he had a very
nice ’63: 17-3 with a 2.03 ERA and nearly a strikeout an inning. He continued
pitching well the next few years, going 8-14/3.53 in Double A in ’64; 14-6/3.33
in a ’65 split between Double A and Triple A; and 11-13/3.09 with four shutouts
in Triple A in ’66, the year he debuted for a few innings in Pittsburgh. He got
his first rookie card in ’67, had a 7-10/3.16 season in Triple A and returned
to a nice couple games in September, one being a complete game eleven-inning
win over the Dodgers. But he then spent all of ’68 back in Triple A, partly as
a recovery from a nasty car accident that broke his leg right after the prior
season. He still had a pretty good half season, going 9-8 with a 2.85 ERA and a
couple shutouts. In ’69 he got his second rookie card, started the season as a
reliever for the Pirates, and knocked off some pretty good innings before a May
trade had him in DC for pitcher Frank Kreutzer, by then a minor leaguer.

Shellenback joined the
Senators and the team’s manager Ted Williams in what was a bit of an ironic
twist. Years earlier Jim’s uncle Frank was Ted’s player-coach on the San Diego
PCL team. Frank got props from Ted in Ted’s autobiography, “My Turn at Bat” and
it had also been suggested that Frank was responsible for turning The Splendid
Splinter from a pitcher into an outfielder during his PCL time, which may or
may not have been the case. Either way, Jim would become more of a spot guy
with Washington,
getting eleven starts and a save the rest of the ’69 season for DC. In ’70 he
had probably his best MLB season as he started 14 games and recorded a shutout.
In ’71 all Jim’s numbers were pretty comparable to his prior season’s except
his won/loss record which tumbled pretty hard. In ’72 he was pitching pretty
effectively but with some bad luck when a shoulder injury took him out of
action in early July for the rest of the year. '74 would work a lot like ’73
except his numbers weren’t nearly as good: a 5.48 ERA in 25 innings for the
Rangers and a 4-4/3.78 season in Triple A. After that season he was sold to San Diego where he would
spend a considerable amount of time the next two seasons in the Padres Triple A
rotation, going a combined 17-11 with a 4.25 ERA and five saves. Then in ’77 he
moved to Minnesota
where he got some light work in Triple A – 2-1/3.90 with a save in 30 innings –
and his final MLB work where he posted a high ERA in a few innings. That was
his final season and Jim finished with an MLB line of 16-30 with a 3.81 ERA,
eight complete games, two shutouts, and two saves. In the minors he went 103-82
with a 3.42 ERA.

Shellenback remained in the Minnesota system after
playing as a pitching coach. In ’83 he served that role in Minnesota. He had an 18-year run for the
team’s Class A franchise in Elizabethtown
that ended with his retirement following the 2011 season.

Jim has a nice signature,
especially for such a long surname. His career came very close to ending after
that ’67 car crash. Those two wins from the second star bullet were successive
and took nearly a run off Jim’s ERA that season: He gave up six hits and two
earned runs against Milwaukee
and threw a two-hit shutout against the Angels. The info regarding his uncle
Frank’s guidance in Ted Williams’ career came from Jim’s ’70 card. His uncle
has a SABR page and was born in 1898, the youngest in his family. So Jim’s dad
was up there when Jim was born, at least in his late Forties. It’s too bad he
got no notice in the “Seasons in Hell” book since his surname minus the S
dovetails nicely with the title: Jim had been to Hell and back. But that’s just
a bad joke.

Friday, May 16, 2014

Technically, this is the
third rookie card for Adrian Garrett, big brother to the Mets’ Wayne. Adrian
had a rookie card in the ’71 set and also back in ’66, when he had one under
his nickname, Pat. That’s a mighty long gap and I would bet that Adrian had about the
longest one between his initial rookie card and his first solo one – eight years
– but I have not the time to research that one. This card commemorates his
busiest MLB season to date during his second go-round in Chicago. After returning via a sale from Oakland late in ’72, Adrian
had a short .377/8/20 line with a .515 OBA in just 53 at bats in Triple A and
was recalled for some back-up work. Despite his card’s designation most of his
plate time came as either a catcher or pinch hitter; his best offensive work
was in the latter role in which he hit .286. Despite the minimal plate
appearances to date Adrian was in the midst of a very long baseball career at
the time of this card, in which he appears to be squirreled away somewhere in
Candlestick. He wouldn’t see another card until ’76 when he would get his final
MLB one on a different team and plate appearance-wise he was still a rookie.
That, too, has gotta be about the longest run for anyone with that many cards.
So in his own way Adrian
helps get to the end of the set with some record-type tidbits.

Adrian Garrett was a big deal
halfback and baseball player at Sarasota
High School when he was
signed by the Braves in ’61 and began his career that summer in D ball, hitting
.242 for a couple teams. After ramping that up the following year to a
.254/19/87 line with a .385 OBA, he would begin a long run at stops with an A
at the beginning. He split ’63 between A and Double A, recording a .249/13/60
line in his 277 at bats while missing half the season for his military
commitment. ’64 was spent entirely at the higher level where his power was
reduced a bunch but his average moved higher in a .280/7/48/.355 season in 477
at bats. In ’65 he moved up to Triple A and earned his first rookie card on the
basis of his .224/20/63/.319 season in which he was one of the Braves’ system’s
biggest homer producers. But that year, despite his debut in Atlanta, he slumped pretty hard - .196/16/40
in 342 at bats – and he spent most of ’67 in Double A. That year he put up much
better numbers with a .257/28/92/.350 line and hit .310 in his few games up in
Triple A and also began playing third base in addition to his outfield duties.
’68 was a bit messy as his line slid to .212/12/37 in 363 at bats at both
levels. But he enjoyed a big bounce in a ’69 spent primarily in Double A,
putting up a .254/24/77/.382 line. After the season he was released by the
Braves, picked up and released by the Phillies, and picked up by the Cubs.

With Chicago in ’70 Garrett would get some more
MLB at bats and would spend most of his time in Double A where he had a
.277/29/86/.365 line while leading his league in homers. He then moved up to
Triple A, where he enjoyed his biggest season, posting a .289/43/119/.406 line
that drew attention from the vastly improving Oakland A’s. Late that August they picked up
Adrian for catcher Frank Fernandez and Adrian spent the balance of the season
doing some left field and pinch hitting work for the division champs. He also
spent a bit of the summer with the team as well in ’72 but most of the year was
spent in Triple A where he posted a .277/12/32.372 line in his 220 at bats.
Then came the September sale to Chicago and after his work in ’73 he got a few
more at bats up top but spent most of ’74 back in Triple A where he had another
big season, in just 318 at bats posting a .280/26/83/.414 line. He pretty much
mirrored that success in ’75 when he put up .321/12/48/.380 numbers in half a
season before a sale to California, where he finished the year with his best
MLB totals by far: a .262 average with six homers and 18 RBI’s in 107 at bats,
nearly all at first base or DH. In ’76 he caught a few games for the Angels
before a sale to San Diego landed him back in Triple A where he again hit well,
with a .310/9/31/.360 line in 126 at bats. That would be it for his time in The
States and Adrian finished with MLB totals of a .185 average, eleven homers and
37 RBI’s in his 276 at bats. He also had 87 strikeouts which helps explain why
he never stuck. In the minors he hit .259 with 280 homers, 961 RBI’s, and a
.360 OBA.

As has been a recent trend,
Garrett moved on to Japan after his US playing time ended and had a pretty good
run there, pretty much parallel with Gail Hopkins from a few posts back. He
spent three seasons with Hiroshima
where his first two were by far his best: a .279/35/91/.358 line in ’77; and a
.271/40/97/.378 line in ’78. In ’79 his numbers fell to .225/27/59/.326 but
that was the year he helped the Carp take the Japanese Series, a fitting way to
go out as a player. He then returned to the US, spending a few years in the
White Sox system, as a coach (’80-’81); minor league hitting instructor (’85);
and manager (’82-’84), going a combined 169-150. After a year off he moved to
the Kansas City system where he coached a season
in the minors (’87) and then five in Kansas
City (’88-’92). Then it was on to the Marlins where he
was a minor league hitting coach (’93-’98) and hitting coordinator (’99-2001).
After another year off he hooked up with Cincinnati
where from 2003 through 2011 he served as the Triple A hitting coach. Since
2012 he has been employed by the Reds as a part time coach. Busy boy.

This being Adrian’s first solo card, he has yet another
tidbit of never having his annual minor league stats appear on a Topps card.
Expanding on the star bullets, he led four leagues in homers in the US and did so once in Japan. He got into catching in
spring training of ’73 when Pete Reiser, a Cubs coach at the time, suggested he
give it a shot to help him stick. So he did tons of bullpen and batting
practice catching and it would be his primary position in three MLB seasons.
Another brother Charlie also played pro ball but he only got as high as Double
A as his career was interrupted by two full years of military duty. Adrian has a very
expansive “Bullpen” tab on baseball-reference.

Sometimes for these guys with
limited at bats these paths can be pretty long:

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

See how different this guy
looked before that face tat? Before there was the ear-chewing Mike Tyson there
was this guy, who gets a rookie card in this set partly due to good timing. The
Dal Maxvill shortstop era had ended during the ’72 season as Dal finished up
that year in Oakland
as one of the many fill-ins for the injured Dick Green. In his wake came Ed
Crosby, who didn’t have enough stick (that’s tough when you’re following a guy
with a .217 lifetime average); and Dwain Anderson, who got a spot on that
year’s Topps Rookie team on the basis of his .267 average (on only 134 at bats)
but had a tough time in the field. Anderson went
to San Diego early in ’73, Crosby had been sent
to Cincinnati,
and the Cards pinned their shortstop hopes on a kid they picked up from Houston,
Ray Busse. Busse had hit pretty well in the minors but always had played shortstop as if he was doing so in a minefield so he was an interesting choice
to inherit the reins from a Gold Glover. He imploded pretty quickly – the rumor
was because of bad nerves – and St.
Louis brought up a second baseman to take his place.
It was a difficult progression but this Mike Tyson didn’t do that badly, posting
some solid D while hitting way better that Dal ever had. Since in the early
Seventies Ted Sizemore was pretty much a rock at second, Mike’s ability to move
over worked out pretty well for him as well. Here he strikes a pose at
Candlestick, letting us know that little guys with a bat – he was 5’9” – can be
fearsome also.

Mike Tyson came out of Rocky Mount, North
Carolina, where he was a serious deal middle infielder
at Nash High, where a few sites out there have him graduating in ’70, when he
would have been 20. That couldn’t have been the case, especially since he went
to Indian River Community
College, a JUCO baseball powerhouse in Florida (that’s redundant) from which he did graduate in ’70 after being selected
in the January draft by the Cards. There was an overlap because Mike got in a
full season that year in A ball as a shortstop. He stuck at that level the next
year through some military time and a move to second base before jumping to
Triple A in ’72, posting some nice defensive numbers, and then making his MLB
debut in September. In ’74 he was hanging out at Mendoza levels most of the
season before a late summer push got him up to his final average of .223. He
did lead the NL in double plays at his position though. In ’75 he reported to
camp overweight, lost his starting gig in spring training to pick-up Ed
Brinkman, and rode the bench the first month-plus. But Brinkman wasn’t the
answer and by early June Mike had re-obtained his starting shortstop role,
posting a much improved line of .266/4/39 in his 368 at bats. In the last
couple weeks he got a bunch of starts at second due to a Ted Sizemore injury.
Those games proved harbingers since after Sizemore’s trade back to LA for the
’76 season Mike moved over permanently. The move worked, at least offensively,
but it would be a frustrating year for him as two injuries – one in April and
one in July – caused him to miss over two months of the season. That was too
bad since he had by far his best offensive run: a .286/3/28 line in his 245 at
bats. In ’77 he remained healthy and reported his best full-year power numbers
but after some early season hitting challenges his average sunk a bit as his
line came in at .246/7/57. He retained the starting job in ’78 but further
compression of his numbers - .233/3/26 in 377 at bats – meant some lost
starting time to Mike Phillips and new kid Ken Oberkfell. In ’79 Oberkfell took
over with his .301 average, Mike fell to a reserve role - .221/5/20 in 190 at
bats, and after the season he went to the Cubs for reliever Donnie Moore.

In Chicago Tyson reclaimed his
starting role at second (ironically from Ted Sizemore) but barely, as he eked
out Steve Dillard for playing time there. But the recently departed Manny
Trillo had set a pretty high bar for offense at the position and Mike’s line of
.238/3/23 in his 341 at bats wasn’t the answer. Neither was Dillard or new guy
Pat Tabler in ’81, but Mike moved to a back-up role anyway and was done after
the season. He finished with a .241 average with 27 homers and 269 RBI’s.

Trying to find dirt on the
web regarding a guy named Mike Tyson who wasn’t a boxer has been nearly
impossible. Two of Mike’s sons have played minor league ball and both were born
in Kansas City
so apparently this Mike spent some time there after baseball but I have found
nothing else out there regarding him.

Mike certainly had the right nickname for sharing a name with a heavyweight champ. But Mike got his by virtue of his place of origin. He really could be a streaky hitter.

At one time the Cruz family
was seemingly headed in the direction of the Alou one (four brothers made it to
the MLB level) so this is a fitting hook-up:

Friday, May 9, 2014

The next card shows a placid
guy in a placid setting – Yankee Stadium during early August, the only time Oakland was in town after
Jesus Alou’s mid-season trade from the Astros. Jesus’ playing time had been in
decline mode since early ’72 and most of his plate time during early ’73 was in
the pinch. He started well enough in his limited role – he was hitting .409 by
the end of May – but a June and July slump nearly halved his average and in
early August he was sold to the A’s. In the AL his timing was actually quite good
since he got lots of starts in left field the next month-plus due to an injury
to regular Joe Rudi. Jesus did a nice job, too, posting a .300 average though he
would continue to be the opposite of “the Walking Man” by putting up only two
BB’s in his 100-plus at bats. Then Billy North got hurt right before the
playoffs and Jesus took his spot in center, getting serious post-season time
for the Series winners. That little smile on his face in the photo was there
for a reason.

Jeses Alou was the youngest
of the baseball-playing brothers and Jesus wasn’t really a fan of the game,
much preferring soccer back in the DR. But he would be big, topping out at 6’2”
and he got talked into giving pitching a shot by the guy that signed his
brothers and he did well enough to get signed in late ’58 by the Giants, again
following his brothers, Felipe and Matty. His first year he remained in the DR
and threw batting practice for the Escogido team in winter ball – he was only
16 – before he got a short look in D ball in the summer of ’59. He didn’t throw
too well and later he hurt his arm so that pitching career ended pretty fast.
But the kid could hit and in D ball the next summer he did just that, posting a
.352/11/91 line with 102 runs and 18 stolen bases before posting the same
average a few games in B ball. In ’61 he stuck at the higher level and produced
a .336/10/71 line. While he was hitting well his arm was still a bit of a
liability from the injury and he would have some tough times in the outfield,
regularly being near the top in errors. But he did continue to hit: in ’62 his
line was .343/11/68 in Double A with 24 steals and his personal best .376 OBA;
in ’63 in Triple A he put up a .324/11/69 line while stealing 18. Late that
summer he made his debut in San
Francisco.

That little bit of time Jesus
Alou had up top in ’63 would be his only shot at playing stateside with his two
brothers. Prior to the ’64 season, Felipe was traded to the Braves, and Jesus
took over his spot in right field. There he cut down on his errors
significantly and had a pretty good rookie year offensively, though it ended
early when he got spiked and missed the last month of the season. He had a
marked upgrade in ’65 but then in ’66 an early-season slump had him on the
bench and then back in Triple A for a couple weeks in June. It seemed to have
done the job as he raised his average over 30 points the rest of the way and
then had a ’67 very similar to his ’65. In ’66 he began moving between both
outfield corners which he would continue doing the next few seasons. In ’68
Jesus had a tough follow-up year while posting only nine walks and dropping
some points off his average though it was still well ahead of the NL norm. After
seeing the success of his brothers after departing Candlestick he’d been asking
– quietly – for a trade as well the past couple seasons. Following the ’68
season he got his wish, soft of, when Montreal
took him in the expansion draft.

Alou’s time with the new
Expos was quite short and in January of ’69 he left via a trade with Donn
Clendenon to Houston for Rusty Staub which got controversial when Clendenon
refused to report to his new club (he didn’t want to play again for Astros
manager Harry “The Hat” Walker). Eventually Donn was replaced by Jack
Billingham and Skip Guinn and Jesus proceeded to sort of bottom out
offense-wise with his new club that really hit the skids after he busted his
jaw in a collision with shortstop Hector Torres and missed six weeks in the
summer. The bright spot, though, was that much like ’66 he returned with better
numbers, hitting .285 the rest of the way. In ’70 Jesus rode the pines a bit to
start the season as new kid Cesar Cedeno pushed other guys around in the
outfield. But Jesus got back his corner spots with some nice hitting and by
year-end posted his best full season average. He retained his spots in ’71 on a
hot start that cooled off a bit. By ’72 Bob Watson was getting too good to leave
out of a regular spot and so Jesus became a bench guy though he did an awfully
nice job in that role that year.

Alou remained in Oakland in
’74, spending most of his plate time in the DH role, and posting a .268/2/15
line in 220 at bats. He got limited post-season action that year but did pick
up another ring. In spring training of ’75 he was released and picked up
shortly thereafter by the Mets. With NY he did some reserve outfield work and
pinch hitting and had a .265 average with eleven RBI’s in just over 100 at
bats. Again released in spring training, this time Jesus decamped full-time to
the DR where he played winter ball and tried to start a business manufacturing
watches. When that enterprise didn’t get off the ground he returned to The
States and Houston and in ’78 had a nice little comeback season, posting a
.324/2/19 in 139 at bats as a reserve left fielder and pinch hitter. After a
reduced role in the same spots in ’79 he was done. Jesus finished with a .280
average with 32 homers and 377 RBI’s. In the post-season he hit .222 with four
RBI’s in 13 games.

Alou continued to play winter
ball in his home country through the ’80 season and finished a 20-year run
there with a .302 average. He then managed a bit, but in ’82 returned to MLB
land as a scout for the Expos. He then moved on to the Marlins in the same role
and in 2002 he became the director of Dominican League scouting for the Red
Sox.

The Alous were unusual in
that they didn’t have that parenthetical thing going with their name. Had they,
the Alou would have been the name in parentheses since that was actually their
mom’s family name. The true family name was Rojas. That was a pretty big game
for a rookie. Jesus only had a .305 OBA which is pretty much the smallest
differential I have seen in this set. He really almost never walked. Good
trivia question: outside of San Francisco, for which team did all three Alou
brothers play? See the front of the card. Jesus has a SABR bio.

These guys were Astros
together in ’72 but neither had enough at bats that year: